Method of making lantern-slides.



H. D. WHITE.

METHOD OF MAKING LANTERN SLIDBS.

APPLICATION TILED OUT. 28, 1911.

Patented Dec. 24, 1912.

Inventor Attorneys.

Witnesses:

- taken on the line 22 of Fig. 1.

HAYWOOD D. WHITE, OF RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA.

METHOD OF MAKING'LANTERN-SLIDES.

Specification of Letters Patent.

Patented Dec. 24, 1912.

Application filed October 28, 1911. Serial No. 657,386.

To all whom it may concern Be it known that 1, HA rwoon 1). 'Wnrrn, a citizen of the United States, residing at Raleigh, in the county 01. \Yalce and State of North Carolina, have invented a new and useful Method of Making Lantern-Slides, of which the following is a specification.

The primary object of the present invention is to provide a method of placing nonactinic exhibitive matter on transparent A further object ofthe invention is to provide means for simultaneously placing a negative and positive upon a light pervious film and making a record of the data placed upon said film.

In thedrawings l igure l is a view illustrating a means for carrying out the method, portions being broken away to show the arrangement of the carbon sheet, etc., by means of which the printing or illustration is placed upon the film. Fig. 2 is a section Fig. 3 is a view showing the film partially withdrawn from the :nvelop which incases the same during the printing operation, and Fig. 4t is an enlarged sectional view oi the film after the exhibitive matter has been placed there' upon. I

The device is primarily intended for use in newspaper otiices where the news as received will be printed on a sheet of paper which is to be sent to the composing room and upon a film for display upon a screen. In carrying out this idea, an envelop 10 which is of thin waxed paper is provided and on one face of said envelop is stamped a frame or border which may be of any appropriate design, the border being equally spaced from the edges of said envelop.

The .film 1i upon which the data is placed and which is of the usual transparent material slightly smaller than the envelop, a border or frame being centered upon the film in the same manner as upon the envelop, the borders registering when the film is inserted in too envelop. The data,should the device he used in newspaper otfices, may be news which it is desired to cast upon a screen and at the same time set up for printing] The negative and positive which is placed upon the film is made by a sheet of manifoldingpaper. which is Folded centrally, the film bein rinserted within the folded paper, the manifolding surfaces of the paper contacting with both faces of the film. The film and carbon are then placed in the envelop 1t) and the data which it is desired to place upon the film is printed, or otherwise stamped within the border which has been previously stamped on the envelop, thus as the border on the envelop and the border on the film are in register, the operator may, by properly centering the printing within the first mentioned border at the same time properly center the same within the border on the film. The data is thus actually printed upon the envelop the carbon causing a positive printing upon the face of the film adjacent the face of the envelop on which the border is stamped and a negative u on the face of the film remote from said her er. Thus in a single operation a printed record upon paper is formed as well as a negative and positive printing upon the film, attention being called to the fact that the paper which receives the printed record forms a casing for the carbon and film.

The device may be used as an advertising medium for kinennitographs and the data placed upon the film may be in the nature of ':lllllOtlllCCIllL'IllS Ul in fact pictures may be stamped or sketched in the bordered space and a negative and a positive of the same placed upon the film, When used in this connection, the envelop which also receives the announcement or illustration forms a pern'ianent record which may be retained for reference. The many uses to which such a method may be applied is clearly apparent and it is not thonghtrnecessary to further elaborate upon the adv antages of the same.

What is claimed is 1. A method of placing non-actinic exhibitive matter upon a transparent film and simultaneously making a printed record. upon a sheet of material, consisting in 10.0- ing the film between two manifold sur aces, placing said film and the manifolding material within an envelop and printing upon one face of said envelop.

2. method of placing non-actinic exhihitive matter upon a transparent film, simultaneously making a printed record of such matter separate from that placed upon the tihn and ol centering the matter placed upon the film within a border previously stamped on said film consisting in incasing the film in mauit'olding material the surface of which contacts with both sides of the film,

and placing said film and manifolding matemy own I have hereto affixed my signature rial In an envelop prowded with a border in the presence of two witnesses.

adapted to re ister with the border of the ,7 H a film and placing exhibitive matter within HAYWOOD H111 5 the border arranged on the envelop by im Witnesses:

pression. i MARX S. NATHAN,

In testimony that I claim the foregoing as M. J. Gomux. 

